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Jorge Luis Arredondo – English Journal, 2021
In this article, Jorge Arredondo begins by describing an experience he had in his Houston, Texas high school where his teacher and a librarian via a collaborative unit made literature come alive for him. His experience later influenced his English language arts (ELA) career in public education and inspired him to do the same for his students. Now…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Literature, Teacher Influence, School Libraries
Michael L. Kersulov; Kelly Falch; Anna Hartwig – English Journal, 2021
During the fall of 2019, the chaotic American political landscape was charged with scandal, debate, and accusations. As a result, students would often bring local and national politics into the authors' high school English language arts (ELA) classes. Instead of ignoring the students' heated debates in the classroom, the authors decided to embrace…
Descriptors: Role Playing, Debate, Politics, High School Students
Melissa Talhelm – English Journal, 2015
Because drama is no new thing to English teachers, perhaps they could benefit from a different perspective on it. What if English teachers thought of each lesson as an unfolding drama with the students and teacher playing major roles? Each lesson becomes an improvisation, a unique opportunity for the curtain to rise on an unexpected scene. The…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Creative Activities, Theater Arts, Classroom Techniques
Michael Arthur Soares – English Journal, 2020
Today, pedagogical stakes are high for students who experience incidents connected to their safety and privacy. Unfortunately, students live in an age when Code Red drills, or the more current Active Shooter drills, are a fact of life. In this article, the author argues that dystopian texts are not only positioned to enhance the complexity of…
Descriptors: Secondary School Curriculum, Language Arts, Current Events, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
William Visco – English Journal, 2019
In this article, the author describes three strategies they have used to bolster interest and make use of popular culture to enhance readers' interactions with texts: pop culture pairings, musical connections, and multimodal projects. The author addresses the cultivation of pop culture awareness, the importance of multimodal pedagogy, the…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Learner Engagement, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Comprehension
Amanda K. Palmer – English Journal, 2018
According to the author, for any change to occur in language arts, it must originate from a classroom need and have the support of "teacher leaders" who are able to carry it forward. Learning environments would cease to exist without a teacher leading the learning. The essence of the profession is leadership, yet many teachers do not see…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Teacher Leadership, Self Concept, Barriers
Burke Scarbrough; Ben Pieper; And Hayley Vetsch – English Journal, 2018
This article explores the power and potential of a role-play collaborative argument project centered on a literary work that has been banned or challenged in schools. In the project, students read a banned or challenged novel as they prepared to play the role of a community stakeholder (parent, teacher, librarian, minister, etc.) at a simulated…
Descriptors: Role Playing, Simulation, Censorship, Books
Tanji Reed Marshall – English Journal, 2018
This article raises the reality of English as a naturally variant and fluid language inseparable from culture. The author addresses the tensions teachers face in the classroom when they make decisions about how African American students should use their language.
Descriptors: African American Students, Language Usage, Black Dialects, Cultural Influences
Lisa Beckelhimer – English Journal, 2017
The author argues that English teachers are in a unique position to respond to death through writing, reading, and speaking. She describes four experiences and offers specific, language-based responses guided by experience and literature.
Descriptors: Language Arts, English Instruction, Death, Writing (Composition)
Eric S. Piotrowski – English Journal, 2017
American adolescents are experiencing an epidemic of anxiety and depression. In this article, Eric Piotrowski explores how regular writing practice and conscious conversations help students struggling with loss, grief, trauma, and myriad associated difficulties including anxiety and self-harm. Students in his classroom use fictionalized…
Descriptors: Grief, Trauma, Anxiety, Psychological Patterns
David E. Low – English Journal, 2017
In an era of "colorblind racism," in which race and racism are often suppressed as topics of discussion in classrooms, this article explores how students used comics to invent workarounds for "colormuteness" in their school. Knowing comics are not generally taken seriously, students employed the medium to subversive ends.
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Cartoons, Role Models, Racism
Elisabeth Johnson – English Journal, 2015
During English class on January 18, 2007, Santo and his tenth-grade classmates were invited to evaluate a set of published, youth-authored texts. Inside one of these texts was a sex advice column. In this article, the author is concerned with the ways conceptions of adolescence and sexuality take hold in and beyond the English curriculum. Through…
Descriptors: Sexuality, Adolescents, English Instruction, Teacher Role
Sarah W. Beck; Karis Jones; Scott Storm – English Journal, 2019
Dynamic and responsive methods enable teachers to assess students' writing skills precisely and equitably, and to empower students of diverse skill levels to develop their writing. Assessing writing with equity-minded precision requires paying close attention to students' performances as writers, identifying challenges in those performances, and…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Writing Evaluation, Student Empowerment, Writing Skills
Dawn Latta Kirby – English Journal, 2016
This article considers how relationships in the English classroom are influenced by the types of literacy activities, the role of the teacher, the tone of oral comments, and the types of writing students share with peers.
Descriptors: English Instruction, Writing Instruction, Literacy, Teacher Role
Clayton M. Gahan – English Journal, 2014
Whether spectators or active participants, students are regularly affected by the world of sports. For many of them, athletic competition is the most energized part of their high school experience. The intensity that sports engender is one of their primary attractions, and teachers can build on this emotional focus to engage students and, more…
Descriptors: Athletics, Literary Devices, Learner Engagement, Mythology